HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES -1- GENERAL INFORMATION Building Name (Common) ______________________________________________________________________ Building Name (Historic) _______________________________________________________________________ Street Address or Location ______________________________________________________________________ Town/City __________________________ Village ________________________ County ___________________ Owner(s) _______________________________________________________________ Public Private PROPERTY INFORMATION Present Use: _________________________________________________________________________________ Historic Use: _________________________________________________________________________________ Accessibility to public: Exterior visible from public road? Yes No Interior accessible? Yes No If yes, explain __________________________________________________ Style of building _______________________________________________ Date of Construction ____________ Material(s) (Indicate use or location when appropriate): Clapboard Asbestos Siding Brick Wood Shingle Asphalt Siding Fieldstone Board & Batten Stucco Cobblestone Aluminum Siding Concrete (Type ______________) Cut Stone ( Type ______________) Other ______________ Structural System Wood Frame Post & Beam Balloon Load bearing masonry Structural iron or steel Other _______________________ Roof (Type) Gable Flat Mansard Monitor Sawtooth Gambrel Shed Hip Round Other ___________________________ (Material) Wood Shingle Roll Asphalt Tin Slate Asphalt Shingle Built up Tile Other ____________________ Number of Stories: __________ Approximate Dimensions __________________________________________ Structural Condition: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated Exterior Condition: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated Location Integrity: On original site Moved When? _____________ Alterations? Yes No If yes, explain: _______________________________________________________ FOR OFFICE USE: Town #_______ Site # _______ UTM ______________________________________ District: S NR If NR, Specify: Actual Potential Minor, Wait, Farmstead Record No. 7318 Minor, Wait, Farmstead 136 Sycamore Avenue Woodbury Litchfield Thomas Paron, Ann Hertberg, 136 Sycamore Ave., Woodbury CT 06798 Domestic: secondary structure; Domestic: single dwelling Agriculture/Subsistence: agricultural outbuilding; Domestic: single dwelling English barn, vernacular style 19th c. Vertical wood siding Square rule framing 1 1/2 24' x 34' (barn), 14' x 20' (shed), 20' x 26' (carriage) Terrace, trellis, pool, conversion of shed to office space. Please send completed form to: Stacey Vairo, National Register and State Register Coordinator, State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development, One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103 * Note: Please attach any additional or expanded information on a separate sheet. Minor, Wait, Farmstead Record No. 7318 Minor, Wait, Farmstead 136 Sycamore Avenue Woodbury Litchfield Thomas Paron, Ann Hertberg, 136 Sycamore Ave., Woodbury CT 06798 Domestic: secondary structure; Domestic: single dwelling Agriculture/Subsistence: agricultural outbuilding; Domestic: single dwelling English barn, vernacular style 19th c. ✔ Vertical wood siding ✔ ✔ ✔ Square rule framing ✔ ✔ 1 1/2 24' x 34' (barn), 14' x 20' (shed), 20' x 26' (carriage) ✔ ✔ Terrace, trellis, pool, conversion of shed to office space.
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HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY - BUILDING AND STRUCTURES
-1-
Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism, One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford, CT 06103
* Note: Please attach any additional or expanded information on a separate sheet.
GENERAL INFORMATIONBuilding Name (Common) ______________________________________________________________________
Building Name (Historic) _______________________________________________________________________
Street Address or Location ______________________________________________________________________
Town/City __________________________ Village ________________________ County ___________________
Owner(s) _______________________________________________________________ Public Private
Concrete (Type ______________) Cut Stone ( Type ______________) Other ______________
Structural System
Wood Frame Post & Beam Balloon Load bearing masonry Structural iron or steel
Other _______________________
Roof (Type)
Gable Flat Mansard Monitor Sawtooth
Gambrel Shed Hip Round Other ___________________________(Material) Wood Shingle Roll Asphalt Tin Slate Asphalt Shingle
Built up Tile Other ____________________
Number of Stories: __________ Approximate Dimensions __________________________________________
Structural Condition: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated
Exterior Condition: Excellent Good Fair Deteriorated
Location Integrity: On original site Moved When? _____________
Alterations? Yes No If yes, explain: _______________________________________________________
FOR OFFICE USE: Town #_______ Site # _______ UTM ______________________________________
District: S NR If NR, Specify: Actual Potential
Please send completed form to: Stacey Vairo, National Register and State Register Coordinator, State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development,
One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103 * Note: Please attach any additional or expanded information on a separate sheet.
Minor, Wait, Farmstead Record No. 7318
Minor, Wait, Farmstead
136 Sycamore Avenue
Woodbury Litchfield
Thomas Paron, Ann Hertberg, 136 Sycamore Ave., Woodbury CT 06798
Domestic: secondary structure; Domestic: single dwelling
Agriculture/Subsistence: agricultural outbuilding; Domestic: single dwelling
English barn, vernacular style 19th c.
✔ Vertical woodsiding
✔ ✔
✔ Square rule framing
✔
✔
1 1/2 24' x 34' (barn), 14' x 20' (shed), 20' x 26' (carriage)
✔
✔
Terrace, trellis, pool, conversion of shed to office space.
Please send completed form to: Stacey Vairo, National Register and State Register Coordinator, State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development,
One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103 * Note: Please attach any additional or expanded information on a separate sheet.
Minor, Wait, Farmstead Record No. 7318
Minor, Wait, Farmstead
136 Sycamore Avenue
Woodbury Litchfield
Thomas Paron, Ann Hertberg, 136 Sycamore Ave., Woodbury CT 06798
Domestic: secondary structure; Domestic: single dwelling
Agriculture/Subsistence: agricultural outbuilding; Domestic: single dwelling
English barn, vernacular style 19th c.
✔ Vertical wood siding
✔ ✔
✔ Square rule framing
✔
✔
1 1/2 24' x 34' (barn), 14' x 20' (shed), 20' x 26' (carriage)
✔
✔
Terrace, trellis, pool, conversion of shed to office space.
-2-
Historic Resources Inventory
PROPERTY INFORMATION (CONT’D)
Related outbuildings or landscape features: Barn Shed Garage Carriage House Shop Garden Other landscape features or buildings: _______________________________________________________
Surrounding Environment:
Open land Woodland Residential Commercial Industrial Rural
High building density Scattered buildings visible from site
• Interrelationship of building and surroundings:
• Other notable features of building or site (Interior and/or Exterior)
None known Highways Vandalism Developers Renewal Private
Deterioration Zoning Other ________________ Explanation ________________
136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT Record No. 7318
✔ ✔ ✔
✔ Open fields, river bank, fencing, pool, tennis court, driveway
✔ ✔ ✔ ✔
✔
See continuation sheet.
See continuation sheet.
See continuation sheet.
See continuation sheet.
Charlotte Hitchcock 2/07/2012
Multiple Views CTHP
Charlotte Hitchcock 3/09/2012
Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation
940 Whitney Avenue, Hamden CT 06517
Latitude, Longitude:41.541209, -73.218432
✔
136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT Record No. 7318
✔ ✔ ✔
✔ Open fields, river bank, fencing, pool, tennis court, driveway
✔ ✔ ✔ ✔
✔
See continuation sheet.
See continuation sheet.
See continuation sheet.
See continuation sheet.
Charlotte Hitchcock 2/07/2012
Multiple Views CTHP
Charlotte Hitchcock 3/09/2012
Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation
940 Whitney Avenue, Hamden CT 06517
Latitude, Longitude: 41.541209, -73.218432
✔
Connecticut State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103
HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY FORM – BUILDING AND STRUCTURES continuation sheet
136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT Record No. 7318 3 _________________________________________________________________________________
• Interrelationship of building and surroundings: The site is located on the north side of Sycamore Avenue (Route 317) which runs in a westerly direction from Woodbury to the town of Roxbury; its name changes to Good Hill Road a short distance to the west. The 30-acre parcel extends north from the road to the Pomperaug River which at this point curves eastward and then southward, forming the north and east boundaries of the property. The river flood plain is a band of agricultural and wooded land that remains undeveloped. Several large residential parcels abut the property on both sides of Sycamore Avenue. Further west and east, the land has been subdivided into house lots with single family residences ranging in age from the 19th to the late 20th century.
A tributary stream, flowing east to meet the Pomperaug River, crosses the center of the site. To the north of the stream the site is wooded, while to the south is a large hayfield. Along the west property line there is a tennis court. The buildings are located on an area of higher ground at the southwest corner of the site, close to the road. They include the farmhouse, a carriage house/garage west of the house, the main barn, and a small shed, both located northeast of the house. The barn is used for storage of lawn and recreational equipment and a home workshop. The shed is finished as a home office. A pool and its fenced enclosure are located on the north side of the barn. Use of the outbuildings is primarily accessory to the residence, though the hayfield is still mowed for hay.
The house at 136 Sycamore Avenue is
a Greek Revival-style farmhouse built or remodeled about 1845. It has a broad three-bay, ridge-to-street façade, which is flushboarded at the first story. The side-hall entrance, with a transom and sidelights, is sheltered within an open one-story porch, which has a nearly flat roof supported by chamfered posts. The wide frieze board under the eaves is repeated on the main block. It extends across the façade and wraps around onto the gable as broad cornice returns. Windows adjacent to the entrance are floor-to-ceiling, with six-over-nine sash, and open onto the porch, an indication that the porch is original construction. The rest of the windows have six-over-six sash. A one-story wing set back on the east side has identical detailing on its porch, which has been screened [subsequently enclosed with windows]. Several small additions extend from the rear of the house (Cunningham).
The three-bay side-hall plan combined with an eave-entry facade seems to be an unusual plan layout for a Greek Revival-style house, with the side-hall layout more typically being associated with a gable-front façade, and the eave-entry facade more commonly having a centered doorway as the colonial style.
• Other notable features of building or site (Interior and/or Exterior): Architectural description:
Inventory of structures (C – contributing, NC – non-contributing): Farmhouse c. 1845 C Barn 19th c. C Shed 19th c. C Carriage house/garage Late 19th c C
Barn:
This is a 1 ½-story three-bay eave-entry English barn, 24 feet wide x 34 feet long, with its ridge-line oriented east-west parallel to the street, located on a high point of the property and set back to the rear of the farmhouse. The main entry is a pair of barn doors in the south eave-side. The gable roof has asphalt shingles and a hip-roofed cupola with a whale weathervane at the center of the ridge-line. Siding is vertical boards painted red. A few courses of the fieldstone foundation are visible along the east and west gable-ends. Grade slopes down from the east and west sides.
Exterior:
The south eave-side has a pair of double-height exterior-mounted sliding barn doors the full height of the center bay. Above the door track and hardware is a shallow hood. The side bays have no openings.
Connecticut State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103
HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY FORM – BUILDING AND STRUCTURES continuation sheet
136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT Record No. 7318 4 _________________________________________________________________________________
The east gable-end has a single exterior-mounted sliding door in the left (south) bay, accessing the interior of the main level. The door has a shallow hood over the track and hardware. To the right (north) is an eight-pane stable window with trim including a beveled lintel; the trim is painted white. There is a single-pane attic window; and dropped girt-line siding divide.
The north eave-side has no windows, and a pair of single-height sliding doors, with a shallow hood above the track. Along the north side is a modern flag-stone terrace with fieldstone retaining walls and wide steps. A heavy timber trellis built from recycled barn beams is attached to the barn wall above the doors and extends over the terrace.
A six-pane attic window is the only opening in the west gable-end. The roof has no overhangs, and a simple trim board at the rake and eaves. The cupola has glazing installed in the openings on all four sides.
Interior:
At the interior, framing is square rule post and beam, with four lateral bents comprised of hand-hewn beams and sawn braces. The interior post has been removed from the bent east of the center bay, and the common rafters have been reinforced by collar ties. The end- and tie- girts are dropped approximately two feet below the plate; all the posts are in good condition, with no visible splitting or failure. The roof framing is common rafters of sawn lumber. The floor is wood planking showing circular saw marks. The owner has installed a storage loft above the girt-line in the west bay, and a stair for access along the west wall.
Shed:
This is a 1-story gable-roofed structure, 14 feet x 20 feet, enclosing a single space which has been renovated into a home office. The ridge-line is oriented north-south, and the northeast corner closely abuts the southwest corner of the main barn, forming a sheltered area which may have formerly been the barnyard.
The exterior has vertical wood siding with a dark stain. The east eave-side has from left (south) to right (north), two four-pane stable-type windows with square trim painted gray, a pass-through door, and a third window. The south and north gable-ends each have a six-pane window located high in the wall. The west eave-side has four four-pane windows. The configuration of windows appears to have been altered by the renovation, with the addition of at least one opening on the east side. Grade declines toward the west, exposing approximately four feet of the rubble fieldstone masonry foundation on the west side. Roofing is asphalt shingles.
The interior has finished walls between exposed elements of the timber frame, revealing a two-bay structure of sawn members with square rule framing, a dropped cross-tie girt at the center of the space, and a ridge beam at the peak of the cathedral-style ceiling. Empty mortises in the girt suggest a former loft floor, no longer in place.
Carriage house:
This is a 1 1/2-story gable-roofed carriage house, now a garage, approximately 20’x 26’. The ridge-line is oriented north-south perpendicular to the road, and the roof is asymmetrical, forming a salt-box profile with the west eave line lower than the east. The south gable-end has a pair of overhead garage doors at ground level and a two-over-two double-hung window with trim in the attic level. The west eave side has a similar window in the ground level. The north gable-end has a pass-through door near the left (east) corner and another two-over-two double-hung window to the right. The attic has a two-over-two double-hung window. The east eave-side has a pass-through door near the right (north) corner and another two-over-two double-hung window near the center of the ground floor wall. Siding is horizontal clapboards with corner boards and square window trim. The roof has overhangs at the eaves and rakes with sloped soffits.
The interior of the ground floor is finished with narrow wood bead-board paneling and the windows are trimmed with square casings, aprons, and sills. A wood step ladder along the north wall accesses the loft level. The floor is concrete.
• Historical or Architectural importance: Applicable Connecticut State Register Criterion:
2. Embodying the distinctive characteristics of a type, period, or method of construction.
Connecticut State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103
HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY FORM – BUILDING AND STRUCTURES continuation sheet
136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT Record No. 7318 5 _________________________________________________________________________________
This complex is significant as a well-preserved example of a prosperous mid-19th-century farmstead on the outskirts of the village of Woodbury. The English barn has fine integrity of materials and finishes and a well-preserved intact timber frame. The surrounding landscape remains open fields extending to the river, with hay harvesting activity still perpetuating some active agriculture and providing a sense of the historical landscape.
Historical background:
The first documented mention of structures on this site came from 1815 at the time of Judson Minor’s marriage, when his father Adoniram Minor transferred it to him. In 1819 Judson Minor sold a one-acre parcel to his uncle Wait Minor (1780-1863) including the house where Wait was living. Wait Minor, a farmer, had married Susanna Judson in 1801. The house must have been either remodeled or rebuilt to its Greek Revival appearance during the second quarter of the 19th century. Wait transferred ownership to his eldest son Israel Minor (then resident in New York City) in 1860 and reserved life use of half of the house for himself, his wife, and two other adult offspring. After Wait’s death, the property was sold in 1864 to Oliver B. Cowles, who is shown (spelled “Coles”) as the owner on the Beers map of 1874. In the late years of the century until 1915 it was owned by Calvin Lines of Bridgeport.
Architectural significance:
This complex is significant as a well-preserved example of a prosperous mid-19th-century farmstead on the outskirts of the village of Woodbury. The river bottom land provided fertile soil while the siting of the house and barns on a knoll provided safety from flooding. Although little evidence remains of the agricultural activities that were its original purpose, this English barn has fine integrity of materials and finishes. Its timber frame is in unusually good condition with little evidence of deformation and only minor deterioration of the wood members. The surrounding landscape remains open fields extending to the river, with hay harvesting activity still perpetuating some active agriculture and providing a sense of the historical landscape. The farmhouse itself combines an elegance of detail with an additive quality in its northward extensions that is characteristic of the working farms of the 19th century. The carriage house with its Italianate style two-over-two window sash and the bead-board interior that is characteristic of many carriage houses of the late 19th century, may have been added during the Lines ownership.
• Sources (continuation):
Photographs and field notes by Charlotte Hitchcock 2/07/2012. Interview with Thomas Paron, homeowner, 2/07/2012.
Map resources:
Beers, F. W., Map of Litchfield County, 1874. Woodbury Assessor's Records http://www.cogcnvgis.com/woodbury/ags_map/temp_pdf/036-037-propcard.pdf
http://maps.google.com/ and http://www.bing.com/maps/ accessed 3/04/2012. UTM coordinates: http://itouchmap.com/latlong.html
Print and internet resources:
Town of Woodbury web site: http://www.woodburyct.org/pages.php?page_id=114 Federal Census, 1860. Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation, Historic Barns of Connecticut Resource Inventory, 2010,
http://www.connecticutbarns.org/7318. Cunningham, Janice, A Historic and Architectural Resource Survey in the Town of Woodbury Connecticut, 1992. Sexton, James, PhD; Survey Narrative of the Connecticut Barn, Connecticut Trust for Historic Preservation,
Hamden, CT, 2005, http://www.connecticutbarns.org/history. Visser, Thomas D., Field Guide to New England Barns & Farm Buildings, University Press of New England, 1997.
Connecticut State Historic Preservation Office, Department of Economic and Community Development One Constitution Plaza, 2nd Floor, Hartford CT 06103
HISTORIC RESOURCES INVENTORY FORM – BUILDING AND STRUCTURES continuation sheet
136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT Record No. 7318 6 _________________________________________________________________________________
1. Location map of 136 Sycamore Avenue, Woodbury CT – from